1 Advances in Political Economy - Department of Political Science

(Sean Pound) #1

EDITOR’S PROOF


Inferring Ideological Ambiguity from Survey Data 371

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Fig. 1 Sample mean and
standard deviation in Benoit
and Laver ( 2006 ) expert data

may indicate the lack of information on the part of respondents (Marks et al. 2007 )
or an intrinsic ambiguity of a party’s policy position Campbell (1983a,b). Thus, to
correctly estimate ideological ambiguity, we have to disentangle the respondent-
level and party-level effects on the observed respondent disagreement.
Second, respondent disagreement might occur due to the scale-heterogeneity ef-
fect: even if a party is not ambiguous and respondents are well-informed, they might
provide conflicting placements due to different interpretation of the measurement
scale. Treating disagreement among respondents without proper adjustments for the
scaling effects can result in faulty inference about ideological ambiguity.
The third flaw ofσˆ as the estimator of ideological ambiguity stems from the
ordinal nature of placement scales. Since the respondents are almost universally
required to place parties on an ordinal scale, the measurement procedure induces
dependence between the sample mean,μˆ, and the sample standard deviation,σˆ.It
is easily demonstrated that for anMcategory measurement scale,σˆ≤


μ(Mˆ −ˆμ).
Therefore, parties with extreme positions will necessarily be evaluated as less am-
biguous simply due to the mathematical properties of the estimatorsμˆandσˆ.In-
deed, this pattern is well represented in the real data on party positions in Fig.1.The
quadratic pattern in Fig.1 could represent the ‘true’ relationship between positions
of candidates and their ambiguity, or it can merely be an artifact of the measurement
model; if we useσˆas our estimate of ambiguity, we simply cannot evaluate which
is the case.

2.2 Interpreting Missing Values


A different approach to ambiguity measurement is offered by Bartels ( 1986 ), who
suggests that respondents are more likely not to place a party on a policy scale if
they are uncertain about its platform. In Bartels’ model, the source of uncertainty is
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